Rebel Wilson attacks again! The "Pitch Perfect" actress made headlines last week for her criticism over the Kardashian/Jenner family's rise to fame. Now, Wilson is back in the media, but this time, she's accusing the family's publicist of mounting a smear campaign against her for dissing the famous family.
"I'd be very happy to debate the Kardashians anywhere / anytime / any topic," Wilson tweeted Wednesday about her feud with the Kardashian/Jenner clan. "Or maybe their publicist can just stop the smear campaign against me because I made one prompted comment about them on Australian radio?"
Wilson later added that she was looking to bury the hatchet with the famous family, tweeting, "In any event, I'm MORE than over this little thing and wish the K clan well X even sent them flowers [flower emojis]."
While on the Australian radio's KIIS FM, the 35-year-old revealed that she refused to present a VMA award with Kendall Jenner and Kylie Jenner. Wilson, who recently started a plus-sized clothing line, found it disturbing that the famous family gained fame through a sex tape instead of hard work and talent. The actress also isn't happy with the images that the Kardashian/Jenner family promotes.
"I got asked to present at the latest VMAs with Kendall and Kylie and said no. They're not famous for talent. I worked really hard to get where I've gotten to," Wilson said. "I mean how Kim Kardashian got famous from the sex tape and I just went to acting school and worked really hard."
"I know they're super popular, but I'm all about personality and working hard to get where I am. I mean how Kim Kardashian got famous from the sex tape, and I just went to acting school and worked really hard."
Although Wilson isn't a fan of the Kardashian/Jenner clan, there's one person who is, and her name is Oprah Winfrey. The former daytime queen defended the famous family during an interview with Kyle and Jackie on Monday, according to Us Weekly.
"I interviewed the Kardashians two years ago and I couldn't believe how hard they work," Winfrey shared. "People think it's just TV cameras following you, that it's easy. But to create a reality series where it looks like something is happening all the time, you have to be on it all the time. We were there for seven hours filming them and they were going to tape for another seven hours afterwards...That is work, no matter who you are."